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e." "Well, then, consider what a classical education would do for Harry! I feel sure that had I--pardon the supposition--been born a man, and made conversant with the best thoughts of the ancients--Socrates, for example--" "What about him?" my father demanded. "So wise, as I have always been given to understand, yet in his own age misunderstood, by his wife especially! And, to crown all, unless I err, drowned in a butt of hemlock!" "Dear madam, pardon me; but how many of these accidents to Socrates are you ascribing to his classical education?" "But it comes out in so many ways," Miss Plinlimmon persisted; "and it does make such a difference! There's a _je ne sais quoi_. You can tell it even in the way they handle a knife and fork!" That evening, after supper, Miss Plinlimmon declined her customary game of cards with me, on the pretence that she felt tired, and sat for a long while fumbling with a newspaper, which I recognized for a week-old copy of the "Falmouth Packet." At length she rose abruptly, and, crossing over to the table where I sat playing dominoes (right hand against left), thrust the paper before me, and pointed with a trembling finger. "There, Harry! What would you say to that?" I brushed my dominoes aside, and read-- "The Reverend Philip Stimcoe, B.A., (Oxon.), of Copenhagen Academy, 7. Delamere Terrace, begs to inform the Nobility, Clergy, and Gentry of Falmouth and the neighbourhood that he has Vacancies for a limited number of Pupils of good Social Standing. Education classical, on the lines of the best Public Schools, combined with Home Comforts under the personal supervision of Mrs. Stimcoe (niece of the late Hon. Sir Alexander O'Brien, R.N., Admiral of the White, and K.C.B.). Backward and delicate boys a speciality. Separate beds. Commodious playground in a climate unrivalled for pulmonary ailments. Greenwich time kept." I did not criticise the advertisement. It sufficed me to read my release in it; and in the same instant I knew how lonely the last few months had been, and felt myself an ingrate. I that had longed unspeakably, if but half consciously, for the world beyond Minden Cottage--a world in which I could play the man--welcomed my liberty by laying my head on my arms and breaking into unmanly sobs. I will pass over a blissful week of preparation, including a journey by van to Torpoint and by ferry across to Plymouth, where Miss Plinlimmon bought me boots,
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